Careful What You Open in the Mail!

Actually, Duane had sent me the AARP magazine because one of its articles attempted to present an evolutionary explanation of why racism exists all over the globe.

When I opened the manila envelope sent by my friend Duane
Burgess of Oklahoma, USA, a grin crossed my face when I glimpsed at its
contents. Inside was a copy of the current (May–June) issue of
AARP The Magazine, published by what was formerly called the American
Association of Retired Persons.1
(The organization now prefers to go by its initials, AARP.)

I thought Duane was taking the opportunity to take a slight dig at me for
turning 50 recently. And it just so happened that the AARP had just sent
me—two days before—an application for membership. Well, the “R” part of AARP
is not anywhere on my radar screen, so receiving two pieces of mail related
to the AARP over two days seemed more than a coincidence—I thought (incorrectly)
that Duane was having a little fun with me and had also put me on the AARP
mailing list.

Actually, Duane had sent me the AARP magazine because one
of its articles was entitled “The Roots of Hatred,” which
attempted to present an evolutionary explanation of why racism exists
all over the globe. The article writer was
simply regurgitating the “psychobabble” that much of the anger
expressed toward different-looking people perhaps originates from our
so-called “hunter-gatherer era.”

She wrote: “Imagine, says the University of California, Los Angeles, biologist
[Jared Diamond] that you have lived in the Paleolithic when small bands of
hunter-gatherers were roaming the world. Usually, each group kept to its
own turf. But just suppose, perhaps pushed by hunger or curiosity, you crossed
the invisible line marking the limits of your group’s territory.”

The article continued with the speculation that the children of early humans
had possessed “evolving brains [which] learned to automatically classify people
as either ‘one of us’ or ‘one of them.’”

In the manila envelope, Duane enclosed a letter he had composed
and submitted to the AARP editor, which we excerpt below. We do so in
order to present a glimpse of the creationist view of a growing-in-popularity
movement called ‘evolutionary psychology.’ As the former
head of a creation group in Tucson, Arizona, USA, and a long-time AiG supporter, Duane’s insights are worth noting
here. (In addition, read AiG’s article on the growing movement called
“evolutionary psychology.” See ‘Evolution made me do it!’) As
secular magazines continue to bombard the culture with evolutionary propaganda,
it is encouraging to know that there are people like Duane who are using
AiG material to respond.

Duane (to AiG): I wrote the magazine in order to politely
inform the AARP that the premise of evolutionary psychology is in error
to begin with, and that because the article was based on that foundation,
the credibility of the entire piece was undermined.

I mentioned, for example, that “the notion of hatred
arising from hunter-gatherers in their ‘evolving brains’”
is flatly false. There is no irrefutable scientific evidence of such
proposed evolutionary development of the human race.

Also, I added that functional complexity does not arise
from disorder by chance (see Dawkins’ Weasel Revisited). There
was no supposed ascension of humanity.

In addition, I wrote that “The brain … has not evolved. People hunt and
gather simply whenever there is no developed community with provision of resources.
Likewise, people dwell in caves when exploring new areas with no developed
habitat.”

“There is but one race, the human race. We need the Creator’s
explanation if we are to come to a correct understanding of anger or
any other element of human nature and behavior.”

I have not heard yet from the magazine whether it will print my letter, but
I least wanted AiG supporters—including those who may have read the AARP article
(it is one of the most-read magazines in the world)—to be aware that such
wrong thinking is pervading the culture as a whole, not just in the scientific
arena.

— Duane L. Burgess, Edmond, Oklahoma, USA

Duane, by the way, is well aware of AiG’s anti-racism book—with
its findings based on Scripture and good science—entitled One
Blood: The Biblical Answer to Racism. Because all human beings are
descendants of one couple, Adam and Eve, we’re all related—of “one
blood” (Acts 17:26)—and have inherited a sinful human nature (Genesis 3) that distorts how we understand our world and our place in it.

In fact, the AARP article writer (perhaps unwittingly) torpedoed
her evolutionary arguments when she wrote that: ‘there are obviously
genetic differences between the smaller groupings called biological populations—say,
between a member of the Yoruba tribe of Nigeria and a Lapp from northern
Scandinavia, for instance. But the genetic differences between
racial groups of white, black, and Asian are less than the differences
within any one of these major groups. This means that you are
more genetically similar to many people outside your race than to many
of those within it’ [emphasis hers].

Ironically, that very scientific finding is one of the hallmark
teachings of AiG’s One Blood book.

It’s a pity that a publication—which bills itself
as “America’s largest circulation magazine"—has
featured an article that will be read by many who will uncritically accept
its evolutionary propaganda. If the article writer were truly concerned
about combating racism, she would have done a much more effective job
if she had quoted people like the late evolutionist Stephen J. Gould,
who recognized that racism can be justified by some people on evolutionary
grounds. Gould wrote that racism increased by “orders of magnitude”
due to Darwin’s research being used as justification.2

Footnotes

AARP is a non-profit membership organization (35
million members) that addresses concerns that affect US citizens 50
or older. Interestingly, its founder is Dr Ethel Percy Andrus, a distant
relative of my wife (whose maiden name is Andrus).

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Answers in Genesis is an apologetics ministry, dedicated to helping Christians defend their faith and proclaim the gospel of Jesus Christ effectively. We focus on providing answers to questions about the Bible—particularly the book of Genesis—regarding key issues such as creation, evolution, science, and the age of the earth.